Aftеr the district court denied his motion to suppress, Bobby Lee McKinley entered a conditional plea of guilty to the charge of causing altered securities (thirty-five American Express money orders) to be transported in interstate commerce in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 & 2314. In sentencing McKinley to a prison term of eighty-seven months, the district court departed upward from the applicable range under the Sentencing Guidelines after finding that McKinley’s criminal history category significantly underrepresented his actual criminal history. As
I.
A.
After his indictment on the current charges, McKinley moved to suppress incul-patory statements he had made to FBI Special Agent Charles G. Southworth in the course of an interview at a Minnesota prison on July 18, 1994. A magistrate judge conducted a hearing on McKinley’s motion and issued findings of fact and conclusions of law which were adopted by the district judge. The facts described here are largely undisputed and are based on the factual findings of the lower courts.
Early in 1994, Agent Southworth learned from local authorities that someone had cashed forged money orders in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Southworth began investigating and learned that thirty-five American Express money orders had beеn cashed and that the face amount of each had been changed from $3.00 to $300.00. McKinley soon became a suspect, and Southworth learned that McKinley was then jailed in Tennessee on unrelated state charges. As a result, Southworth sent a communication to the FBI’s office in Jackson, Tennessee, asking an agent there to attempt to contact McKinley. In late May or early June 1994, Agent Gary Boutwell called Southworth to report his findings. 1 Boutwell had learned that McKinley was being held on state forgery and impersonation charges relating to his use of a false credit card. At McKinley’s arraignment on those charges, the Tennessee court had appointed Pam Drewery, a public defender, to represent him, and Boutwell had contacted Drewery on May 27, 1994. The agent first informed Drewery that the FBI was investigating McKinley in connection with altered money orders cashed in Wisconsin, and he asked Drewery for permission to interview McKinley. Drewery responded that at that time, she did not want her client interviewed by the FBI with regard to the encashment of altered money orders or any other matter. She told Boutwell, however, that she would inform him when her representation of McKinley ended.
Near the end of June or the beginning of July 1994, Boutwell called Southworth with an update. Boutwell reported that he had received a call from Drewery on the 21st or 22nd of June informing him that the Tennessee case had been adjudicated and that her representation of McKinley had ended. At about the same timе, Boutwell also had received a call from McKinley himself, who expressed an interest in speaking with the agent. Southworth could not recall, however, whether Boutwell had been available when McKinley called or whether the agent had only received a message to that effect. 2 Boutwell finally told Southworth that McKinley had been transferred out of Tennessee and that Boutwell had been unable to speak with him before the transfer.
Southworth subsequently learned that McKinley had been transferred to a state prison in Stillwater, Minnesota. Southworth then called the Minnesota prison and spoke to Allan Kirschner, McKinley’s ease manager. The agent described the nature of his investigation and asked Kirschner to inquire whether McKinley would be willing to speak with him. McKinley apparently realized that he had no obligation to speak with South-worth, but he indicated to Kirschner that he knew of the FBI’s investigation and that he would be willing to speak with the agent. Kirschner relayed this information to South-worth.
Southworth travelеd to Stillwater to meet with McKinley on July 13, 1994.
3
McKinley
The meeting between Southworth and McKinley lasted forty-six minutes, and Kir-schner likened their exchange to a tennis match, with each attempting to achieve his own goals. After Southworth described for McKinley the evidence he had gathered, McKinley explained that he had heard much of this before. He told Southworth that deputies from a Minnesota sheriffs department had already confronted him at Stillwater, which had prompted McKinley to contact an attorney. Southworth asked whether McKinley was currently represented or whether he wanted an attorney present, and McKinley responded “no” to both queries. Southworth eventually advised McKinley of his Miranda rights and presented him with a preprinted waiver form. Southworth read the form to McKinley, who then appeared to read it himself. McKinley signed the form and then made incriminating statements about the Eau Claire money orders.
The district court refused to suppress these statements for three reasons. First, the court rejected McKinley’s contention that Drewery had invoked his right to counsel in all future discussions about the altered money orders when she informed Boutwell on May 27 that she did not want the FBI talking to McKinley about the altered money orders or any other matter. The court found that Drewery had only invoked McKinley’s right to silence at that time. The court found, moreover, that even if Drewery’s statement could be construed as a continuing invоcation of the right to counsel, McKinley had subsequently waived that right when he called Boutwell and expressed an interest in speaking with him. In so finding, the court rejected McKinley’s contention that the government’s proof on this point was inadequate because it was based on double hearsay offered only through Southworth. Finally, the court found that the July 13 interview was not a custodial interrogation because McKinley had not been “in custody” for Miranda purposes.
McKinley now challenges each aspect of the district court’s ruling. He first argues that the court erred in finding that his Tennessee attorney had never invoked his continuing right to counsel. The court then compounded that error, according to McKinley, by crediting uncorroborated double hearsay to find that McKinley had later initiated contact with the FBI. McKinley finally contends that he was “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes during the interview with South-worth at the Minnesota prison. We review the denial of McKinley’s suppression motion for clear error.
See United States v. Banks,
B.
In
Miranda v. Arizona,
McKinley’s suppression argument is based at the outset on the contention that his Tennessee attorney invoked his right to counsel under Miranda during her May 27 conversation with Agent Boutwell. McKinley does not argue that he separately invoked that right in the course of his July 13 interview with Agent Southworth. Indeed, he signed a form waiving his Miranda rights during that interview and also told Southworth that he was not currently represented and that he did not wish to have counsel present. His inculpatory statements could only be suppressed, then, if McKinley had at some earlier point invoked his right to counsel and had not subsequently waived that right by initiating a further uncounseled dialogue with the authorities. 4
When asked by Boutwell in their May 27 conversation for permission to interview McKinley, Drewery responded that at that time, she did not want McKinley interviewed by the FBI about the encashment of altered money orders or any other matter. McKinley argues that Drewery’s statement unambiguously invoked his right to counsеl in connection with any further custodial interrogation. Yet the district court characterized Drewery’s statement as only a temporary invocation of McKinley’s right to silence which did not also serve to invoke his continuing right to counsel under Miranda and Edwards.
Preliminarily, it is clear that McKinley’s request for counsel at his arraignment in Tennessee did not serve also to invoke his
Miranda
right to counsel in connection with custodial interrogation addressed to an unrelated charge. The Supreme Court foreclosed such an argument in
McNeil v. Wisconsin, swpra,
distinguishing a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel in a pending criminal proceeding from the distinct
Miranda
right, derived from the Fifth Amendment, to have counsel present during custodial interrogation.
To invoke the Sixth Amendment interest is, as a matter of fact, not to invoke the Miranda-Edwards interest. One might be quite willing to speak to the police without counsel present concerning many matters, but not the matter under prosecution. It can be said, perhaps, that it is likely that one who has asked for counsel’s assistance in defending against a prosecution would want counsel present for all custodial interrogation, even interrogation unrelated to the charge.... But even if [that] were true, the likelihood that a suspect would wish counsel to be present is not the test for applicability of Edwards. The rule of that case applies only when the suspect “ha[s] expressed ” his wish for the particular sort of lawyerly assistance that is the subject of Miranda.
In
Davis v. United States, supra,
a divided Supreme Court held that a suspect’s invocation of his
Miranda
right to counsel must be unambiguous to be effective and that absent an unambiguous request, police officers need not cease their interrogation nor attempt to clarify whether the suspect in fаct is invoking his
Miranda
rights. — U.S. at -,
If, instead of calling Drewery, Agent Boutwell had approached McKinley directly and asked to speak with him about the Wisconsin money orders, the analysis of his response under
Davis
wоuld be more straightforward. Had McKinley responded as Drewery did — that he did not wish to speak with the agent while the Tennessee case was pending but that he would contact the agent When the case concluded — -we would have no difficulty finding his response insufficient under
Davis
to invoke his
Miranda
right to counsel. Such a statement omits mention of a lawyer or legal counsel of any kind, and in that sense, a reasonable police officer would not have understood the statement to constitute a request for an attorney.
See, e.g., Kight v. Singletary,
In short, the district court’s conclusion that Drewery’s statement was a temporary invocation of McKinley’s right to silence, and not an invocation of his
Miranda
right to counsel, was not clearly erroneous.
See Banks,
II.
McKinley also challenges the district court’s upward departure from his Sentencing Guidelines range. The PSI set McKinley’s offense level at 14 and his criminal history category at VI, which under the 1994 Guidelines .provided for a sentencing range of between 37 and 46 months. Yet because McKinley had 40 criminal history points, 27 more than required to place him in the highest criminal history category, the district court found that category VI significantly underrepresented McKinley’s actual criminal history. The court therefore added one offense level for every three of McKinley’s criminal history points that exceeded 15.
8
This resulted in an eight-level departure and
Guidelines § 4A1.3 authorizes a departure where the defendant’s criminal history category significantly underrepresents the seriousness of his criminal history or the likelihood that he will commit further crimes.
See, e.g., United States v. Scott,
! His only complaint about this aspect of the departure is that the district court failed to consider that he had served the maximum sentence on most of his former convictions. Even if true, however, that would not affect the court’s ability to depart upward under the Guidelines based, on his extensive criminal history. As the government points out, McKinley’s argument proves only that the earlier periods of incarceration did little to deter him from further criminal activity.. In that -sense, the time McKinley served on the earlier convictions actually supports the departure here, as section 4A1.3 allows the court to consider “the likelihood that the defendant will commit other crimes.” That is what the district court did, finding that McKinley’s criminal history proved that he had not been deterred by his past convictions and that he was unlikely to be deterred in the future absent a departure and lengthier sentence. (Feb. 24,1995 Tr. at 22.)
McKinley’s only other objection to the departure relates to the observation below that it was “further supported” by the fact that McKinley had involved “vulnerable
There is no need for us to consider the propriety of such a departure under the Guidelines, however, because it is clear that the district court’s concern did not serve to increase the extent of its departure. Before even mentioning McKinley’s manipulation of juvenile females, the court determined to depart by eight offense levels based solely upon the 40 criminal history points McKinley had accumulated — a number the district court described as “massive.” (See id. at 21, 23.) The court settled on eight levels, moreover, by adding one level for every three of McKinley’s criminal history points that exceeded 15. Thus, the court specifically linked the extent of its departure to McKinley’s criminal history points. Only after doing so did the court mention that the departure was “further supported” by McKinley’s involvement with “vulnerable juvenile females.” (Id. at 23.) Because that fact prоvided only “further support” for the departure and did not affect the extent of the departure, which the court had already calculated based on McKinley’s criminal history points, we need not consider whether it is an aggravating circumstance “of a kind, or to a degree, not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the guidelines.” U.S.S.G. § 5K2.0.
Affirmed.
Notes
.The conversation between Boutwell and South-worth was related through Southworth, as the government did not produce Agent Boutwell to testify at the suppression hearing.
.Neither Boutwell nor Southworth prepared a written report of their second conversation, although Southworth had prepared a report after Boutwell’s initial call.
.Southworth had first investigated whether
. Our analysis assumes, of course, that the July 13 interview was a "custodial interrogation” and that Drewery's May 27 statement, if construed as a' request for- counsel under
Miranda,
was not premature. We need not decide either question to resolve McKinley’s appeal, but neither is free from doubt in this circuit. See, e.g.,
United States v. Menzer,
. Indeed, courts have found that even where a suspect makes an equivocal statement about consulting an attorney, there has been no invocation of the right to counsel under
Davis. See Davis,
- U.S. at -,
. Recall that McKinley did not himself direct Agent Boutwell to his attorney but that Boutwell contacted Drewery first of his own accord. Our discussion here is not intended to address the potentially distinct situation where a suspect directs a law enforcement agent to his attorney when asked for an interview.
. Having concluded that McKinley did not clearly invoke his right to counsel under Miranda, we have no occasion to consider whether the gov-eminent established through competent proof that McKinley then waived his rights by initiating contact with Agent Boutwell.
. The sentencing table assigns a defendant to category VI if he has 13 or more criminal history points. Because the categories immediately preceding category VI apply to a three criminal history point range (e.g., category V applies to a defendant with 10, 11, or 12 criminal history points), the court concluded that its departure should account only for those points exceeding 15.
. The court then departed downward two levels to account for McKinley's substantial assistance to the government, giving him a total offense level of 20 and a sentencing range of 70 to 87 months. The court sentenced McKinley to an imprisonment term at the top of this range—87 months.
. In
Glas,
the district court did not add offense levels but used hypothetical criminal history categories, determining the sentencing range applicable to each of the new categories it created.
. The district court was quite troubled by this ■aspect of McKinley’s conduct, and understandably so. At one point in the sentencing hearing, the court observed:
I am very concerned about your manipulative use of juveniles, females who are in vulnerable positions either because of their age or because they're addicted to drugs or they've run. away from home or whatever. I think you have a real sense of who those people are and a real sense of how to take advantage of them to your own ends.
(Id. at 21.) The court mentioned this concern again in explaining its decision to sentence McKinley at the very top of the applicable range. (Id. at 23.)
